2. SHOW&
TELL
30 | QUINNIPIAC MAGAZINE | WINTER 2015
BY ALEJANDRA NAVARRO
J
ason Gamsby, JD ’13, a trial lawyer with the Faxon Law Group in New
Haven, recently had a client who entered the hospital for routine sur-
gery and left with paralysis, kidney and heart damage, significant
brain damage and a head deformation. The injuries followed a stroke
and subsequent surgeries that were a result of staff errors.
An articulate lawyer, Gamsby could have explained the repercussions of
these errors to the mediating judge. Instead, he and his firm created a video
that captured the limitations and challenges of his client’s new life: not being
able to wash himself, eat or get to and from doctor visits without assistance
from his aging sisters.
“If you’re a trial lawyer in the state, or the country, one of the best ways to get
your point across is to do a visual like this,” said Gamsby, who often handles
complex personal injury cases involving product liability or medical malprac-
tice. “These ‘day in the life’ videos start off in the morning and tell your client’s
story, just as they would in a deposition. I’m not telling you; I’m showing you.
These videos really get to your heart.”
The client received the settlement he wanted, which will pay for the care he
will need for the rest of his life.
As a paralegal for about a decade before entering law school, Gamsby had
seen these types of videos, but it wasn’t until he took the course Visual Persua-
sion in the Law that he understood the elements that made a video compelling.
VISUAL PERSUASION PERMITS
LAWYERS TO GO BEYOND
ORAL ARGUMENTS
3. Jason Gamsby, JD ’13,
says video can enhance
his ability to persuade
a judge or jury.
MichelleMcLoughlin
4. 32 | QUINNIPIAC MAGAZINE | WINTER 2015
Neal Feigenson, professor of law, and Christina Spiesel,
adjunct professor, teach the course. Fifteen years ago, they were
the first to offer what no other law school had at the time: a
course that gave law students the skills and knowledge to under-
stand, create and effectively use demonstrative evidence from
graphics to photographs, videos and animations.
“Lawyers tend to paint pictures with words,” explained Brian
Young, JD ’12, a former student in the course. He and fellow
alumnus Virginia Jijion-Caamano, JD ’12, started the Law Firm
of Jijion-Caamano and Young in Trumbull, Conn.
“We tend to think, ‘I can do this with the power of my writing
or my oral argument.’ Neal and Christina taught us how to think
about visuals in legal cases and understand the difference
between the message presented by words and the message pre-
sented by visuals. The world is changing, and law schools need
to produce lawyers who can think differently.”
Today, recording devices are ubiquitous, and their recordings
are often an integral part of high-profile cases. Surveillance cam-
eras assisted in the capture of the accused Boston Marathon
bombers. An elevator security camera taped football player Ray
Rice assaulting his wife, and the footage led to the NFL commis-
sioner suspending him indefinitely. The convicted murderers in the
Cheshire home invasion filmed their own heinous crimes. And a
bystander with a camera phone caught the police chokehold that
led to the death of Eric Garner in New York City.
Third-year students, who most often take this elective, have
spent most of their lives in a digital environment. While the course
draws on their digital know-how, its foundation has remained con-
stant since 2000.
The course takes students through several simple exercises that
show how pictures and words can change each other’s meanings.
Students also learn how many different ways people will respond
to the same pictures, which will help them anticipate how these
multiple meanings may help or hinder them in communicating
their message to a judge, jury or other audience.
The students bring this experiential knowledge, as well as expo-
sure to visuals used in practice, guest lectures and multidiscipli-
nary readings, to their work on two major course projects. First,
they create a piece of demonstrative evidence to illustrate and
explain testimony or other facts, using either analog (such as a
poster) or digital media (such as PowerPoint); then, they work in
teams to produce a short digital video to be used as part of their
argument in a case.
“We hope the students will gain some basic visual literacy and
“The world is changing, and
law schools need to produce
lawyers who can think
differently.”—Brian Young, JD '12
basic digital visual literacy,” explained Feigenson, who researches
the psychology of legal judgment and the uses of visual media in
legal communication and persuasion. “It’s a big step one just to
have their eyes and their minds open to the possibility of using
images as well as words when they put their cases together to
make their arguments more effective.”
“Big step two is to think critically about the uses so that they
might see the possibilities in the evidence and how it might be
used,” added Spiesel. This includes considering what visuals the
opposing counsel will use and how to counter them—by creating
more or different visuals for her own side. In addition to teaching
at Quinnipiac, she is a visual artist and senior research scholar at
Yale Law School.
Many of the ideas that Feigenson and Spiesel learned while
working with their visual persuasion students over the years were
incorporated into their 2009 book, “Law on Display: The Digital
Transformation of Legal Persuasion and Judgment” (NYU Press).
NEW HOME
T
he new School of Law Center on the North Haven Campus
contains a Visual Persuasion Suite outfitted with six com-
puter workstations, locked cabinets for equipment, and an
adjoining classroom to view and discuss projects.
Like many great ideas (think: Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak
starting Apple in a garage), Feigenson and Spiesel started their
groundbreaking course in a library storage closet in the School of
Law on the Mount Carmel Campus.
“There was enough room for one person to face the computer
and a couple of other people to squeeze in the room,” Spiesel
recalled. Students would sit on the counter, and sometimes under
the counter, crossing their fingers that their early versions of video
editing software wouldn’t crash and destroy their work. That first
year, Feigenson and Spiesel weren’t certain students would be able
to complete their video projects.
Professors Neal Feigenson and Christina Spiesel review a video with
third-year law student Travis Nunziato in the new editing suite used for
the Visual Persuasion course.
CourtesyofFlannel
5. WINTER 2015 | QUINNIPIAC MAGAZINE | 33
“Some lawyers may use it precisely because it’s flashy, not really
appreciating that it’s not serving their purposes,” Feigenson said.
Moreover, not all images and video are allowed into court.
Lawyers have to work with materials that have some kind of pro-
bative value to the case, as determined by the judge or mediator,
and they must make sure to authenticate any pictures they want
to use as evidence.
THE FUTURE
F
eigenson is now working on a book investigating the use
of demonstrative evidence to convey what a litigant’s sub-
jective perceptual state is like. Is it possible to use science
to see what someone else thinks he’s seeing, even though it’s not
what the rest of us see? Sounds fanciful, even futuristic. But
researchers are already using fMRI (functional magnetic reso-
nance imaging) and sophisticated conversion algorithms to
reconstruct, on the basis of brain scans, the visual images people
are generating in their brains.
The technology is young, but one day we might be able to view
what a person is thinking or remembering—or even dreaming,
Feigenson said.
“There is a deep tension in our society between loving what
digital technology makes possible and being afraid of digital
technology taking over what we regard as essential qualities of
personhood,” Feigenson said. “Partly because of that, it’s unclear
how judges and juries will respond to this sort of technological
evidence if it becomes available.”
No matter how the technology advances, visuals always will be
a part of the legal system. The key is to know how to use them
and to anticipate how the opposing side could use them in a trial
or negotiation. The course will continue to evolve to reflect what’s
happening in practice.
Spiesel cautioned that visuals alone will not win a case, but
properly thought through and skillfully deployed, they can be
highly effective.
“It is very important, first, to have some idea of what pictures
have been seen by the public if there has been publicity surround-
ing the case. Then you need to know what will help your jury or
the people you are negotiating with understand the case better,”
Spiesel explained.
“Clear, good communication, backed up by evidence of facts,
presented in a way that is easily understood, is enormously
powerful.”
“There was a certain camaraderie, an esprit du combat, when
you have 10 people working in a shared space with IT,” said Speisel
of one of their many workstation homes.
For each main project in the course, students argue the same
side of a fictitious lawsuit that reflects a real or potential case.
Young’s class had to argue on behalf of a deaf woman who wanted
a deaf child. The fertility lab’s error led to the woman giving birth
to a baby who could hear. Young’s group believed a jury would
have a hard time understanding the desire for a child who couldn’t
hear. They showed that many deaf children have a great life.
“We ran all these pictures of kids having fun—waterskiing,
water tubing, playing—and didn’t identify them as deaf until the
end,” said Young, whose group used promotional footage from a
camp for deaf children. “Fun is fun for everybody.” The video,
through interviews, demonstrated the challenges of a deaf mother
raising a hearing child given the two distinctly different communi-
ties they would occupy and the emotional investment made by the
mother throughout the fertilization process and the pregnancy,
only to have her expectations shattered.
“It was a phenomenal class,” Young said. “The law is far more
than the courtroom. Being able to persuade people with visuals is
important in a number of different arenas.”
Young has used visuals in seemingly straightforward contract
issues. He creates more visually appealing presentations, often
enlarging important text passages for emphasis. In one case, Young
said he believes his use of color photos in a property appraisal offset
the cold plot map, allowing the court to have a clearer vision of
the property. Whatever the reason, the court made a $1.5 million
upward adjustment that Young believes wouldn’t have happened
without the photos to bring the property to life.
OWNING THE MESSAGE
F
eigenson and Spiesel make the future attorneys acutely
aware of the challenges of using demonstrative evidence.
Using images, a lawyer can make a desired point without
actually saying it, Feigenson said. “Sometimes it better serves your
argument to imply things than to say them outright,” he said. “On
the other hand, whenever you use pictures, you don’t always con-
trol the message.”
Lawyers may present images that are interpreted in different
ways. This was apparent in Ferguson, Mo., where a police officer
shot and killed an unarmed teenager. The course will discuss the
case this spring. No one recorded the shooting on video; however,
convenience store security footage and audio recording of gun-
shots were released and fueled public opinion both in favor of and
opposed to the officer involved.
People seeing the same footage had different interpretations,
which often happens with pictures. “Will they draw their own con-
clusions about who is responsible just as they did in the Rodney
King case?” Feigenson stated. “Of course they will, and they will
draw opposite conclusions.”
“Society just expects to see visuals,” Gamsby said. “If they aren’t
there, they think something is missing.” Gamsby noted videos can
cost a few thousand dollars to make, so a lawyer needs to evaluate if
it’s worth the cost. Not all pictures and videos are helpful to a case.
“Sometimes it better serves
your argument to imply things
than to say them outright.”
—Professor Neal Feigenson